1._Then Jacob went on his journey _(62) Moses now relates the arrival
of Jacob in Mesopotamia, and the manner in which he was received by
his uncle; and although the narration may seem superfluous, it yet
contains nothing but what is useful to be known; for he commends the
extraordinary strength of... [ Continue Reading ]
4._My brethren, whence be ye? _The great frankness of that age appears
in this manner of meeting together; for, though the fraternal name is
often abused by dishonest and wicked men, it is yet not to be doubted
that friendly intercourse was then more faithfully cultivated than it
is now. This was th... [ Continue Reading ]
13._And he told Laban all these things_. Since Laban had previously
seen one of Abraham’s servants replenished with great wealth, an
unfavourable opinion of his nephew might instantly enter into his
mind: it was therefore necessary for holy Jacob to explain the causes
of his own departure, and the r... [ Continue Reading ]
14._And he abode with him the space of a month_. Though Laban did not
doubt that Jacob was his nephew by his sister, he nevertheless puts
his character to trial during a month, and then treats with him
respecting wages. Hence may be inferred the uprightness of the holy
man; because he was not idle w... [ Continue Reading ]
18._I will serve thee seven years_. The iniquity of Laban betrays
itself in a moment; for it is a shameful barbarity to give his
daughter, by way of reward, in exchange for Jacob’s services, making
her the subject of a kind of barter. He ought, on the other hand, not
only to have assigned a portion... [ Continue Reading ]
22._And Laban gathered together_. Moses does not mean that a supper
was prepared for the whole people, but that many guests were invited,
as is customary in splendid nuptials; and there is no doubt that he
applied himself with the greater earnestness to adorn that feast, for
the purpose of holding J... [ Continue Reading ]
25._And he said to Laban_. Jacob rightly expostulates respecting the
fraud practiced upon him. And the answer of Laban, though it is not
without a pretext, yet forms no excuse for the fraud. It was not the
custom to give the younger daughters in marriage before the elder: and
injustice would have be... [ Continue Reading ]
27._Fulfil her week_. Laban now is become callous in wickedness, for
he extorts other seven years from his nephew to allow him to marry his
other daughter. If he had had ten more daughters, he would have been
ready thus to dispose of them all: yea, of his own accord, he obtrudes
his daughter as an o... [ Continue Reading ]
30._And he loved also Rachel more than Leah_. No doubt Moses intended
to exhibit the sins of Jacob, that we might learn to fear, and to
conform all our actions to the sole rule of God’s word. For if the
holy patriarch fell so grievously, who among us is secure from a
similar fall, unless kept by the... [ Continue Reading ]
31._And when the Lord saw_. Moses here shows that Jacob’s
extravagant love was corrected by the Lord; as the affections of the
faithful, when they become inordinate, are wont to be tamed by the
rod. Rachel is loved, not without wrong to her sister, to whom due
honor is not given. The Lord, therefore... [ Continue Reading ]
32._She called his name Reuben_. Moses relates that Leah was not
ungrateful to God. And truly, I do not doubt, that the benefits of God
were then commonly more appreciated than they are now. For a profane
stupor so occupies the mind of nearly all men, that, like cattle, they
swallow up whatever bene... [ Continue Reading ]